The Domino Effect of Witnessing
by Manorama
Old School
Teachings
Early
in my training, Guru ji, Shri Brahmananda Sarasvati,
taught me that life is either a play or a drama. He
said it would all depend on how I saw it. What he
meant was, see life as a play and you will see clearly, see it
as a drama and all that it reveals is that your vision is partial. Living
from a partial perspective alone causes suffering. Partial
vision means seeing life from the individual perspective alone. When
we look at life and the situations we encounter through the lens
of individuality, we understand the world according to
that individual perspective.
After many evenings listening
to Guru ji offer teachings, I started to think: How do I
develop seeing so I can experience life as a play? How do I
access the universal view he spoke about?
During meditation, Guru
ji guided students again and again: “Feel what you are beyond the body and
mind. Remain still. Be like the
witness and feel your real form, which is true happiness.”
I caught the phrase…‘Be
like the witness and feel your real form….’ Hmmm…so witnessing was a
bridge between the individual perspective and the universal perspective…though I didn’t
understand it then, I sat with it more. After some
time, I noticed questions had arisen in me around
the topic of witnessing. These questions created an internal
conflict.
Conflict
and Fear Around the Practice of Witnessing
Throughout the world, Yoga students are advised
to work with witness consciousness. Other conscious practices, such
as Buddhism, and the New Age movement teachers guide students to
practice watching in order to calm the mind and experience inner
peace. However, many people that hear these teachings may feel, practically
speaking, that engaging witness
consciousness is of little value. I wonder if perhaps
it seems confusing to them as it did to me. Here is a list of statements
or questions that arose for me regarding the practice of witness
consciousness:
1. Witnessing is boring and un-dynamic because
all I’m doing is watching.
2. If I am stationed in the
witness, will life somehow pass me by?
3. If I watch everything, how will I
get anything done in my life?
4. How will I relate
with the people I care about when all I’ll be
doing is sitting around and watching? Will I have to be
willing to lose connection with everyone to gain some kind
of supposedly great thing called witness consciousness, which will
ultimately lead me to union with Self?
My mind reeled, what a
price to pay!
If you find yourself relating to any of these
questions regarding witness consciousness, I assure you, you are NOT
alone. These questions and others like it are normal
and common.
With a view towards understanding them, I
believe it is wise to allow such questions the necessary space
to exist. And rather than agree with them or reject them,
my suggestion is for you to work to explore them.
When you become established in witness consciousness, you do not become
disconnected from your body and mind. Instead, you experience a shift in
perspective.
The Value
of Witnessing
“Witnessing
supports internal softening because it creates space.”
~ Manorama
~ Manorama
Through a regular practice of witnessing (and
by regular, I mean daily), you develop the capacity to shift from a
personal perspective alone, to a universal one. Moreover, seeing
beyond your own personal point of view causes compassion to rise in you
more and more, because you begin to see not only your own, but
also another’s perspective, and eventually the whole of a situation.
In this way, witnessing enables you to relate and
communicate with all beings with ahimsa, compassion.
You also begin to understand the
worldly realm more, which includes your body and mind because you come closer
to them in understanding. In other words, if you fear
losing the ability to communicate with the world
around you, don’t worry because the more you move into
witness consciousness the more the opposite actually happens. You come
into such contact with your self that you are naturally able to communicate your
feelings and thoughts with your self and others.
When you work with witness consciousness, life does
not pass you by as you may fear. Witnessing is not just another
way of saying ‘lie around and do nothing’. It is a practice that
supports dynamic contact with one’s center, as you watch the
periphery of thoughts and ideas play out. In other
words, live your life normally and in the process hold to the
center. As you engage each experience, practice seeing as
the witness and watch how that opens up a fuller perspective for you.
Note: All
references to Guru ji in this article refer to Shri
Brahmananda Sarasvati.
© 2012 Manorama, Luminous Shabda/Sanskrit
Studies
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